To improve the performance of our website, show the most relevant news products and targeted advertising, we collect technical impersonal information about you, including through the tools of our partners. You can find a detailed description of how we use your data in our Privacy Policy. For a detailed description of the technologies, please see the Cookie and Automatic Logging Policy.

By clicking on the "Accept & Close" button, you provide your explicit consent to the processing of your data to achieve the above goal.

You can withdraw your consent using the method specified in the Privacy Policy.

On Tuesday, officials from the International Monetary Fund arrived in Kiev for a nine-day visit to review the country's loan arrangement; Kiev hopes the visit will end in the resumption of IMF lending. Ukrainian economists Alexander Dudchak and Denis Denisov explain why the injection of IMF funds will not help their country's battered economy.

The IMF officials, led by Ukraine mission chief Ron van Rooden, are expected not only to assess Ukrainian authorities' efforts to implement the fund's recommendations, but to continue what is already the second review of the Extended Fund Facility, a program meant to assist countries which have balance of payments problems and need an extension on their adjustment period.

In 2014, the IMF approved a two-year, $17 billion loan to Ukraine; Kiev received only a small part of this amount, after which the program was quietly phased out, with Ukrainian authorities failing to meet the loan conditions set out by the financial organization. In its place, in 2015, Ukraine received a four-year $17.5 billion credit line, being given a $5 billion tranche in March 2015, and a second $1.7 billion injection last August. Since then, additional funding has not been forthcoming due to the country's ongoing political crisis and the lack of progress in reforms.

Now, authorities hope that the new government, led by Petro Poroshenko ally Volodymyr Groysman, will help Ukraine unlock the next tranche of IMF loan money. In accordance with IMF energy reform requirements, Groysman has already announced a 60% increase in the price of gas for households. The new prime minister also promised to fight corruption and to reform the country's system of administration.

Last week, in an article for The Washington Post, political science professors Neil A. Abrams and Steven Fish warned that the billions in Western assistance funneled into Ukraine over the past 25 years have not helped the country; on the contrary, they noted, "for every dollar of aid that flows into the country, $6.25 illicitly flows out." The scholars concluded that ultimately, the West may be better off refraining from additional assistance "until the coming to power of a truly new leadership."

Speaking to Ukrainian politics and economics experts, independent Russian newspaper Svobodnaya Pressa came to conclusions that were somewhat different.

For his part, economist Alexander Dudchak told the newspaper that the IMF will most likely provide Ukraine with a new tranche, but it will again accuse the government of corruption in the process. "For this the mission does not even have to look at the data. They know without doing so that a significant portion of the fund money will go into the pockets of officials. Such is the nature of the current authorities in Kiev, and the IMF's activities there."

The current reality, Dudchak explained, "is that Ukraine no longer has any other sources of funds for its budget. In theory, an economy is supposed to exist on domestic business, manufacturing, trade. But since everything was done, with the IMF's help by the way, to collapse the Ukrainian economy, the fund's managers have effectively become the sole entity holding the entire country on a leash."

Asked why the Western media has left its earlier tack and turned to a more candid criticism of the corruption of Ukrainian authorities, the analyst suggested that "it's all just a policy to put pressure on the government, and to force it to adjust its course."

"However, it demonstrates the West's attitude toward Ukraine's authorities. They are letting these people know that in and of themselves, they mean nothing to them. They were just an instrument to put pressure on Russia and to create a tension point in the region. Now they have done their job, and they can be replaced with someone else."

Ultimately, Dudchak suggested, IMF lending as an institution should be viewed separately from traditional lenders, who make repayment their number one priority. "When the IMF offers its loans, they have very different objectives; they aren't concerned with interest repayment, but with the ability to influence a country's foreign and internal policy. We saw how the fund factually instructed the Ukrainian parliament how to vote and which laws to pass. This is a political organization, one which solves crucial global geopolitical and economic problems. And loans are merely the smokescreen used for doing so."

Denis Denisov, the director of the Ukrainian Branch of the CIS Institute, echoed Dudchak's assessment.

It's worth recalling, the analyst noted, that "the IMF's lending program to Ukraine was temporarily frozen because the country's leaders could not solve a number of issues related to the fund's recommendations. Specifically, they could not make the necessary legislative changes which would increase tariffs for gas, electricity, utilities, and make revisions to minimum pensions and wages."

"The IMF called this a need to 'balance the budget', but its factual result was to lower the majority of the country's citizens' from being 'poor' to being below the level required for subsistence. At first, it was the Yatsenyuk government that was engaged in this. Now, the baton has been handed over to Volodymyr Groysman."

At the moment, Denisov noted, there are an estimated 40 laws which must be passed to resume lending. "And if we recall the history of the fund's operation in the past 40 years in other countries, it can be concluded that the financial institution is not interested in the prosperity of other countries, but in making money on these loans, and using them to influence the host state's policy and to determine its development vector."

"Most likely," the analyst lamented, "the credit line for Ukraine will be extended, and the IMF will continue to drive the country into bondage with their so-called financial assistance."

By clicking the "Post" button, you provide your explicit consent to the processing of your Facebook account data to enable you to comment to the news on our website using this account. You can find a detailed description of how we use your data in our Privacy Policy.

By checking this box, you provide your explicit consent to the processing of your personal data to create an account on the Sputnik website for posting comments to news. You can find a detailed description of how we use your data in our Privacy Policy.
You can withdraw your consent by using the feedback form or the method specified in the Privacy Policy.

* All fields are required

Please confirm your e-mail to continue. Confirmation instructions have been sent to

Hello,
!

We are committed to protecting your personal information and we have updated our Privacy Policy to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), a new EU regulation that went into effect on May 25, 2018.

Please review our Privacy Policy. It contains details about the types of data we collect, how we use it, and your data protection rights.

Since you already shared your personal data with us when you created your personal account, to continue using it, please check the box below:

I agree to the processing of my personal data for the purpose of creating a personal account on this site, in compliance with the Privacy Policy.

If you do not want us to continue processing your data, please click here to delete your account.

promotes the use of narcotic / psychotropic substances, provides information on their production and use;

contains links to viruses and malicious software;

is part of an organized action involving large volumes of comments with identical or similar content ("flash mob");

“floods” the discussion thread with a large number of incoherent or irrelevant messages;

violates etiquette, exhibiting any form of aggressive, humiliating or abusive behavior ("trolling");

doesn’t follow standard rules of the English language, for example, is typed fully or mostly in capital letters or isn’t broken down into sentences.

The administration has the right to block a user’s access to the page or delete a user’s account without notice if the user is in violation of these rules or if behavior indicating said violation is detected.